W- t i Ti v. ., :ft Ew 5' . is lv IS l .,' u-, & TS' ;) r- 3,,4r; -L r r tBucntna $)uhtic Hc&Qer PtTIlMP t.P.nr.pn rnimAMV A crnuH it k. cuhtis. rmmtsi' l ,Chro II, tudlnrfton. Vice President: fciJI.C. Mnrtln. tcrcretnrr nl Trenaurer: rh."itl.8. Colllnii. John II. William and )ijonn J, Spurgcon. P';ctora. KDtTOniAI IlOAtlD! &AVID 15. SMlt.KY. ... .'. Editor .4UVblIN r. StATlTtN.. rli.nt 11ii.ln Mrr iAc"Wihod dally al runuc Lr.txirn Ilulldlnc, -,'i ArtAiTia Cliv i'rc.wl'iilon llulldlng i ," YoK 304 Madison Ave. l?Pw19IT 701 1'orcl Hulldlng rT. Louis loos Kullerton Uull.llnit Clllcuno 1302 Tribune Uuildlng ' i, NKW3 IIUltllAUHi v' B. Cor.'Pennaylvanla Ave. and 14th fit. rw Ycum Ilcituc The Sim. llull-llns; .. HUHSCIIIPTION IIATRS Tlw rr.iNu l'tiniio l.rnnrn la arried to iibncrlbera In rtillndclphlA and MirroumlliiR .town nt the rate of twelve (12) centa per rK. pavnblA to the carrier. llV mall In hulnlu mifM r.t THill n ilAtnltlll . In .'he United States. Canada, or United Btnles poelon. pot:iee free, ilfty (noi ins. nr nnnni v.l.n . ,11,111,11. 1IA U ptudi in advance To all fnrelcn ruuntrlea one (11) dollar ter month. N o T I o Tr Suh-crlbora wlnhlnc address 'changed munt clvo old an well aa new ad- BELL,' 1000 WAtMJT KEYSTONK, MAIN J000 C7 Addrets nit communications to Kvenina Tubllc Ledger, Independence .Vuuure, Philaitlphla. Member of the Associated Press run assoviatkd punas u ticlusivcly entitled to the use for republication of nil neies dispatches credited to it or not otherwise credited in this paper, nnd aho the local news published therein, .All rights of republication of special dispatches hcicin arc also reserved. Phllidrlphll, Turiday. Autt 10, 1920 A FOUR-YEAR PROGRAM FOR PHILADELPHIA Thine on which the people expect the netr nilmliilstriillnn to colleen- trnto l(a attention! The Dcttuouret river bridge. A drydock bin enouph to accommo date the laricst ships. Development o the rapid transit sys tem. A convention hall. A bulMlna for the Free Library. An Art Museum. Enlargement of the water supply. Homes to accommodate the population. .. i THE TEST IN TENNESSEE rnllK question before the Tennessee -- Legislature which convened yctcr Caj Is neither the readiness or unreadi ness of the nation for suffrage nor the merits or demerits of woman franchise. The countrv is ready foi suffrage. The weight of public sentiment favors It. Hoth political parties have nnsrd as Its cliRliiplous. If there is hesitnucy in Nashville it will be for about the same 'reason that there was delay and dually inaction in Dover. Professional politicians nr,' having the deuce of a time mnkiiir, up their minds which will be the most embar rnaslnr- fho ,TPntlr.n nf n nerv rlnssi of i Voters who perhaps may not be nt nil responsive to gang campaign methods nnd all the old technique or the flat de- fiance of popular opinion. In Debt ware the irritation of the public was obviously regarded as the secondary peril. . The Tennessee politicians face some ' different conditions. Th" burden of reaching n decision before the presi dential election cnnuot be shifted to an other state. The opportunity of all the women of the republic to vote for Presi dent must be deferred for another four years .unless there is n suffrage major ity in XnsUvllh. The test that is nt hand involves the postponement or the . immediate achievement of the emanci pation of women. The worth of the cause has outgrown the stage of argument, nxpedieucy, narrowly or generously viewed, will de termine the outcome in Tennessee. A HOPE OF NEGOTIATION THE chief peril In the Polish crisis has not been the miglit of the Soviet nrniies but the indecision of the Allies. , If the conference at 11 the bus. as is reported, actually repaired this weak ness, hopes 'of an adjustment not in volving the outbreak of a hideous new- war in western Lurope may perhaps be revived. "Prospects of negotiations with Itussia have not entirely iiinishcd. The Polish plenipotentiaries are supposed, to have crossed the fighting zone east of War saw en route for .Minsk, where n meeting to arrange terms for an armistice will take place with the Molshevist commis sioners tomorrow. Till., time flu e is little chance tli.i the Polish legates will Inch due creden tials. The realities of the siluatlon are too grave to permit nf the further in trusion of vain technicalities. ' The capture nf Warsaw, though it would be a calamity, would he second ary to inability of the Kntente nnd Po land to state their position clearly and fearlessly and with no blinking nt facts. Among these is the obvious one thnt a Bolshevist dash into Poland and the sweep of Soviet arms through western Kurope do not invade the same domain of likelihood. WATERWAYS AND WEARINESS TIME was when the Panama Canal was n tiresome topic. That was in the days when the need -for that great work contrasted shnrpl and vet tritely with the delay in starting it. Some what similar conditions nre now affect Ing the subject of interunl waterways. Ve need them this year, we needed them last year and the car before. Their proper development still lngs. Upon this theme Mayor Moore nec essarily repeats himself. In Issuing the cnll for the meeting of the Inland Waterways Association to be held in Atlantic City In October, the president of the association reiterates the old arguments. Thv are tinnn-nveriblc No sine cifzi-n will dlsp-ito the fact that "waterways work. They deliver the goods (in time and without emli.nr K0.es. They go on working under pres rnt handicap' and ghc .'round tor the belief that when developed and con nected they will work mote efliclcntlv." The particular undertaking in wiilch the association is especially interested Is the enstern trunk line, which "waits upon the adoption of important links, notably that across Xew Jersey, for Which favorable leglslatlcn, both state nnd federal, is still to be obtained." When the transportation channel is effectively In operation, the boredom which earnest words on itsjielinlf now bo often Invite will nssuredly give way To ssti&factinn nnd pride. NEEDLESS QUALMS HIBTOHIOAL memory is evidently not an nsset of the local political camps, which nrc sold to be considerably troubled over the "apathy" of the electorate regarding the presidential (Jtctlons. August is regularly the dull t ot months In the quadrennial en in -lialgtis. The really heavy artillery IbtUMers In, the autumn and public lu tcrcst In the battle Ik Invariably keen. , It Is stilt too early to forecast con clusively what the character of the cam polcn will be. Knelt Indications ar nrc available, however, suggest that plat forms, arguments mid opinions nro des tined to piny a fnr larger part In the contest tlinn personalities. Already the reaction from the ltoosevelt-'WIlsou style of campaigning Is marked. If the Democratic and Itepubllcau headquarters in this city nre expecting that sort of vividness they nrc likely to be disappointed, but there N renlly little cause for ntnrin over the dog-day In difference tif the public to "preparing" Itself for registration. That net Is void of complexity, and about the only way to make ready for it Is to don a' hut and proceed to the division booth on one of the three appointed ilnys. The first of these Is September . There it niuple time for keying one self up to the occasion. DR. PENTECOST NEEDED NO PONCE DE LEON FOUNTAIN In His Mind and In the Minds of Other Old Men There Was the Immortality of Perpetual Youth mlin death of the Hev. Dr. (ieorge A. V. IVntecnst on n railroad train While on the way to preach In his church in this cltv suggests a text on ymitlifin- nets, lie was eignty cars oni auom the Mime age as .lohn Wntiiiiiinkcr, his chief church elder and uas not feeling well, but he was going to preach nr usual. Ills resolution forces one to a most Interesting and suggestive con clusion. It is that it was his body alone that was old while his mind was still onng. The machine, through which the mind operated was worn out nnd brol.e down while the will .-at in the driver's scat, with its hands on the - ......... steering wheel when the crash came. If j V '" "" . , 'I'liinniy prou etion is we mnv believe the teachings of religion "!eveloped at the expense of duality. V.x the mind which directed the will Is still i 1'Tlcnccd sh pbiilhlers- and seafaring conscious and in action, enjoying that immortality of which its occupancy of the human body was but a brief mo ment. The immortality of the mind, its eternnl joutlifulness. If you will, is proved by the experience of most thoughtful persons. The ipiest for the fountain of perpetual youth has never been entered on by any one absorbed in the pleasure of the mind. Police dc Leon sought the fabled spring that lie might rejuvenate his body to enable it to enjoy the pleasures of the senses. Likewise. Knu-t of the legend sold his soul to the dcWI in order that his bod might be made to cast aside its inuiitl of senility so that it could respond to t-uiisiiiil reactions. T. !.j tl.n lin.1i tlint wrmvu .-till. The i, in in.- inpn' ii". ' . -..- mind of the child is, within its sphere of ; experience, the mind of the man. e I know that there is an unending debate between two schools of psychologists, i one of which insists that the infant's j ."mind Is a blank sheet of paper, on ' I which the world writes its record, vl.lle I flic oilier maintains iiint me uiinii 's n mnss of inherited tendencies which gradually manifest themselves in con duct and point of view as the body de velops. Such facts as the investigators have been able to assemble refute the aye Deep no . a.,-,,,,,, - n .... ,.v blnnk sheet theory and cxpcrieiu e ml observation sustain the theory thnt' the mind of the infant possesses at the beginning all the qualities which nuiii est themselves in the mature adult. The attitude of the boy toward life is the same as thut of The man. The i hoy's knowledge increases with the , years and he corrects nnd modifies his ' point of view ns experience enlarges his j range of vision. It look a poet to ilis rovcr that men are children of a larger growth. If hi' had been a inctnphysi- riaii he would have snid that there is. no nge In mind, but merel age nnd de fi.t.ititnent tti tin. Instrninioi f lliriioi-li which the mind works If the mind of ' .... nui,i,...,,.,fi,...t,i ,.1,11,1 -.v-.r,. ....f ! .,, ,'... i in the bodv of a collie do,: we should have a manifestation of canine iute'II gence which would lay the mini who de scribed it liable to the charge of nature faking. Mut we should simply have n mind operating through a machine which would respond to its commands. These remarks seem to enrry one a long way from the death of a preacher nt the age of eighty years. Mut as a matter of fact they nre intlinntel' ro tated to it. They explain why Doctor I'enteeost decided to preach Inst Sun -dav in spite of his phsicnl feebleness. They point to the rensons why ndults of sixty remain youths nt heart and why many of them nre iinnble to understand why youth does not accept them as one of its delightful contemporaries. We laugh at nil old Indy who tries to act as n girl nud forget that she is still Irl in her immortally youthful ml-d. We wonder ut the great achievements of Clnnencean at the age nf eighty be cause we are in the habit of associating fullness of years with decrepitude. Mut the mind of Clemenceau which directed the policy of Prance during the war was the same mind whose activities won for him the title of the Tiger, nnd earlier controlled his conduct while teaching Krench in a young ladies' sem inary In Connecticut. Age weakened his body, but not to such nn extent thnt the mind could not continue to use It. ('Indstnne, ns premier of Knglnnd nt the nge of eighty, used the same mind which won distinction for him in his first cabinet post. frauds Joseph of Austria died full of ears, a sad and disappointed mnn, but he nscended the throne in his youth with the snme outlook on the world, the outlook of a mnn on whose shoulders is plnced n burden heavier than he can hear, but who bears it with courage nnd fortitude. Henri Fnbre in his old nge had the same Insatiable curiosity about the se crets of insect life that inspired him to begin bis painstaking researches In his youth. His eyesight fniled nnd his fingers grew clumsy, hut the mind within him kept up its persistent in quirv after fncts. The intellect of our own John Mur roughs, whose body is more than eighty years old, is as young ns ever, exploring the inexhaustible realms of nature with the same zest with which he began his quest. And the real Lymon Ahbott of today is the Lyman Abbott of sixty years ago, with an Intense interest in ethical prob lem. He is more mellow nud tolerant, not only beenuse his knowledge has in creased nnd he hns acquired a more lively appreciation of human fallibility, but because there were olways In him the seeds of tolerance ami mellowness. The list might be lengthened inter mlnnbly. Mut enough instimceslmve been cited to suggest to the thoughtful nn examination of his own mental nttitude today and a comparison of it with that of ten or twenty cnrs ago. He will discover that he knows more and that. Ills point of view on certain subjects may have changed Mut he will nlso discover that on the whole he la the same person he was at the nge of ten it fifteen, only a little more bo.And EVENING PUBLIC he will bow his head in wonder and awe hefore the mystery of personality, a wonder that the mother contemplating her children early has forced upon her attention. I Why is it thnt Dickie was nlways an independent and self-sufllclelit little rascnl and would never consent to bo cuddled even when ho was itn Infant In arms nnd why is it that his brother snuggles his little head Into your neck every time you pick him up nnd likes nothing better than to ncstlp in the nrms of any one good enough to hold him? The only answer is that the mental attitude toward life of the two small children has already begun to manifest Itself just as in his old nge the deter mination of Doctor rentecost to do his duty ns he saw It carried him to hN death in its fulfillment. JUNK THE WOODEN SHIPS THM continued ctforts to get some sort of financial return from the Meet of wooden ships built by the 1'nlted Stntes for war purposes now bring forth a proposal by n Inrge exporter that the j en tide in tied hulks be sold to the Soviet , Covernment of Hussln. They would. lie tliliiKs, lie serviceable for short hauls and so relieve som of the traffic con gestion that Is bothering the Holshe vists. nut mere is only one , shtetl way to get a return h"'!". Hint Is to junk th Hut there Is only one sane, far- from these em. 'Ilielr cost should he written off as a part of tne wnr debt nnd the sooner the coun try forgets the glaring stupidity that gave them birth, the better it will bevfor all concerned. To soil them to anybody even to the Dolshevists would he deliberately to deepen the nlrendy deep distrust of Amerlcnii business methods that. trav elers find In almost every foreign coun try of the globe. So long ns they Moat. tney win oe visum evidence of I lie con !....!.. ,. .,. , ., . men knew when the project was first branched that ships built of green tim ber would be potential death-traps fnr officers and crews s0 long as they vere In use. Hut the warnings of these iiijjn were unheeded : the ships were built. Prom the time they were launched, these ships have been useless and dan gerous. Today they are only useless. The Soviet fioverument, or any other government, might Indeed kepp them t'hiut by continual patching and repairs, but every bill for upkeep and every dan gerous weakness that developed under way would he put down to the detri ment of American workmanship and American honesty in business. They would simply degenerate into traveling nnti -American propaganda, silent hut resistless, and. wherever they were seen. they .would iiisiillouslv sin-end a con- ..... ., ,, tempf for us and our prim Iples that miglit in time cost us far more in n -tun loss of trade than we toiild get from the sale of the shins. As a nation, we are firm believers in good advertising. Sending these Hunting death -traps to u potential customer in permanent iraue is decidedly not good advertising. Junk the hulks nnd forget them. MEXICO'S NEW BURDEN - yrKXI(.0.j, M,PlmMlt w, 10 ,,.,. lyl . .. nnn ,,it' m"' lVl,H,s .of $--on0'- 000 a cnr to mnintain him in state and surround him with fifty guards of his own chosen men. may seem n-tnnisiing to a northerner who, accustomed to the honorable carrying out of nil bargains, will naturally consider this a great bur den which the tnxpncrs will have to rarrv for many jears to come. So it would lie in the North. P.ut the man familiar with Melco md Me leans will view the compncf with perfect equanimity, even thniich he be located ill the southern repub'ie nnd forced to contribute his slmre. lie ""'" S,;,I' ' ' ,',,,n,.1 "V,'tiv" m,'t,ln'1 ' ending the bandits career nf out- In wry and. second, he will consider it a most economical way, een If the stipend slmiild have to be paid for. more than one enr. He will not expect it to be necessary to pay it longer than that. Mexicans have ways of terminating these things. I'siinlly, when a bandit chief is in vited to a parlev under full guarantees of personal safety down there, his friends bid him n tearful farewell when he leaves them. They do not look for lii tn to come hack. Psuallv he does not. Mut Villa had n following too strong to make it safe for the government to carry out its guarantees of personal safety In the usual way. They had to let him live. Now, however, with the ex -bandit fattening under nn unwonted luxury, which will inevitably get him further and further out of touch with his old companions, it will be an easy j"ntter for the government to enter upon a consistent policy of scattering ills former followers until an regathcrlng nt his call will he impossible. Then the payment of the S'J.OOO.OOO a year will automatically cease. No announcement has vet been made of where Villa will be burled CONSTITUTION PROPAGANDA THE Constitutional League nf Amer ica, which hns just been chartered, aims to place a enpv of our fundamental national law in ".0.000.000 homes. What will become of the little volumes or pptnphlets hereafter is a prospect which fills these truly 100 per cent Americans with hope. Sow the seed Is their motto, and cheerfully awnit tin harvest. There Is something, of course, to be said for this rugged optimism. Tucked nwn in the back of the dictionary or n discarded school hHory, the constitu tion is obtainable in perhaps the ma-jo-itv of Ainerlenu households. The theorv thnt icni'lc accessibility nnd at tractive 'orm rount for something has Its t.riints And yet copies of the constitution have never really been scarce. It is the will to read, to weigh, digest nnd con blder thnt has beep so lamentably lock ing. The mnt superficial perusal will roven! to any literate person Jhe fact thnt the power of Congress to declare war cannot be abrogated by ony treaty with r.uv foreign power or group of poivcrs unless the constitution is for mally amended to that effect. This can only le accomplished by agreement of tcrec-feurths of the states. The ubiquitous display of the const! tiitlnuoi text is at any rate worth try ing. Mut the distant thunder of Doctor Johnson Is nlwas disquieting. "Sir." he marcel at a dull acquaintance, "I can furnish ou with reasons, but not ,ith an understanding " A traveler in tfie grain belt of the Southwest has discovered that the farmers, though prosperous, are no longer buying silk shirtsy As the "silk shirt" has become the symbol of the "orgy of extravagance," the presump tion is that we should all he grateful for n apparent return to normal. Though, of course, the silk shlrtmiikers have unotiier po'"t of view When the police have gotten rid nf nil tlie nutn bandits thev mnv turn their atUntiou to' the autfiuushtrs. I , LiEDGER-J:1HtLAi)ElitIlIA, TtjMrik, HE WAS UNAFRAID How Gov. Penrjypacker Jolted the Supreme Court Freight Tunnels Under the City a Now Forgotten 8chemo Uy GK0IM1I! NOX MeCAIN GOVKUXOU SAMi'KTj W. PKNNY PACKKJt wns the only Individual that ever handed the Supreme Court of Pennsylvania nn uppercut nnd got nway with It successfully. Governors, attorneys general, high state officials, mayors of cities with metropolian nsplrntinns, nnd the nli and sundry lescr lights in the political fcenlth arc subject, nt some time in their nfllcinl career, to jolts thnt sorely Jar their dignity. A distinguished senator once remarked to me thnt he had become so accustomed to being kicked thnt he never turned around to see who was doing the kick ing. A grent deal haN been said nboiit the brusniieness of Samuel W. Penn.viiacket. but those who knew him best were nwnre that he was one of the cleverest diplomats that ever occupied the guber natorial chair. He had William A. Stone, Jnmes Ad dams Heaver nnd Martin (5. Mrumbaugh fensed to a fare-you-well when It came to tact of n certain kind. TUB Supreme Court of Pennsylvania Is presumed to he. nnd rightly, the acme of nfllcinl and personal dignify. It is the shrine before which the bright est legal lumlnnrlcs dim their glow. There wns one time, however, when the court's effulgence pnled n trllle. It wnH when flnvcrnor Pennypncker decdlned to attend tin dedication of the Pennsylvania building nt the St. Louis Exposition In Mn.. 1!)0I. because be was at sixes and sevens with the per sound of the Supreme Court. The stage was all set for the Gov ernor's nppeni.ince. He was to have been the orator nf the day. A private car was engaged in which the Ciovernor nnd members of the Su preme Court were looking forward to a halcyon time. In the Interim, though, a coldness had arisen between the executive and the court. It wns the talk of the state. It reached n point in which the term "strained relations" scarcely destriuci. it. The justices of the Supreme Court hnd decided to hear appeals from the middle district In Philadelphia Instead of llarrisbitrg. The (ioxornor resented this action. The law provided that the court should sit in the middle district. A. IC. McClurc, piothoiiotnrv of tlie Supreme Court and its recognized mouthpiece on the subject, declared that the courtroom lu the state Capitol was unlit for use. Mesides. the law librurj wns whnllv iniidcnunte. lids declara tion still further incensed tlie Governor. Mutters were in this condition just before the St. Louis junket was to take place. THE committee In charge of the ded ication exercises, of rhich Colonel .Tames II. Lambert wns executive ofli- cer. were nt their wits' ends. itli tlm Governor floutlnc the Supreme Court nnd the latter liietnphorlcnlly In viting his excellency "to go to," it would certnlnly embarrass Its members to occupy the same car with nun. It was finally suggested that the Gov ernor should have his own special car. wlil'i- another wns to be provided for members of the court nnd their fami lies. , The-hcight of the ridiculous was reached when it was proposed that the Governor's car he placed at one end of the train and that of the justices at the other. The work of engraving the elaborate invitations had begun, when the order was peremptorily nnceled and all plans chanced, and this without notice to the court. Governor Penti packer had cut the Cordian Ttnot. He decided to forgo attendance nt the dedication and instead to make his appearance on !' nnsyivanin nay. i ne latter was set ior .iuhiisi -". iw iiuni crsary of General Authnii Wayne's victor over the Indians nt Fallen Tim bers. IT FOLLOWED that as the Governor would not intend the ceremony neither could the members of the Su preme Court, so thev all were com pelled to stay at home and chew the cud of disappointment. They missed a fine trip and tn elaborate ceremony. Governor Pennvpiickcr did not, of course, declare in so mnn words thnt he hnd declined to appear at the dedica tion for fear of embarrassments that might arise from meeting members of the court. The reason assigned was that Penn s.xlvaiiia day, and not the dedication of t'he Pennsylvania building, was the proper oceilon for his appearance at tlie St. Louis Imposition. Then per haps he winked at Mrcunley Wharton. He is the only iiidhidual who ever threw a monkey wieneh into tlie beau tifully adjusted machinery nf the liigli cst judicial bod of the state. THE Philadelphia Rapid Transit Co. hasn't hud to fislit competition since Thomas E. Mitten grasped the helm. Its present troubles ncall a now for gotten scheme that was hatched sixteen venrs ngo liteinlh to dig the ground from under its feet. It wns known a the freight tunnel project, and contemplated the construc tion of freight subwa lines under every important downtown thoioiighfnre. Its real sponsors weie Israel W. Dur ham and James P McXicliol. though Senator William Flinn. of Pittsburgh, wns understood to complete a trio of principals. Others interested were Sennfnr Charles A. Porter, Speaker Henry F. Wnlfnn. ex -Senator John S. Weller, J. Cliltnu Erb and Select Councilman William Gallagher, of the Tenth ward. The proposition created such con sternation in Mapid Transit circles that President Parsons hurrhd away to Chi cago to Inspect Its then recently con structed freight tunnel railway. The proposed subway was to consist nf tunnels nine feet in height and six feet in width at a depth of about forty feet beneath the surface of the strict. in connection with the trunk line and branch tunnels theie were to be freight stations with elevators from the surface hv which freight could be loaded directly into the cars. The cars would then be delivered to steam railroads at various poitits on the outskirts of the cltv. It wns a mighty clever scheme, but it never umnunted to anything. It exists today only us a memory.' It ma he announced more or less niithoritnthely that intcnention by the Allies in the war between Poland uiid the Molshevlsts s wholl unnecessary. The Journal de Geneve notes that the Poles Imve captured BO.OOII Molshevlsts and instead of Interning them (which costs money) have decided to lecture them on the evils of communism, Rive them puckages of salt, matches and to bacco and send them home. Fifty thou sand unwitting propagandists hearing things longed for but not found in Itus sia will Induce other Molshevists to sub mit to capture and exchange their arms for salt, matches and tobacco. What follows? Well, logic Is logic. First thing you know the Molshevist army vlll be well provided with salt, matches nnd tobacco but won't hnve either guns or ammunition! Don't thlngn work out I well ou paper! - - i i SHORT CUTS When iu doubt don't. Uox seems to have corralled tlfts punster vote anyhow. The political candidate hns nit other optimists hacked oft the map. Xew York hnd fifty -two murdcra last j ear. Mill changed every week, ns It were. In the life of n Polish geographer n day's woik is no different trom a dny's zees. The old song now runs: Oh-llcl-oo-llc!-oo-lle!-ec! HulTrnge courting Tennessee ! The amount of work Inquisitors nre putting iu on The Crank suggests that they have owned flivvers. "Labor Is thinking," snys a news paper headline. Then doubtless It has discovered that thinking Is labor. Ma or Moore has cleared his ground and done some plowing. There Is Justification for the hope of good crops. T" Welfare organizations urge the using of more milk. Good ndvicc, but the price list presents some discourage ment. Thirty-cent milk is predicted in Xew York. This may have a tendency to reduce the number of bottle fed babies. The memory ofOaly' Theatre. Xew York, will at least live ns long ns the steel office structure thnt is to tnke Its place. With Ir7.nsnys7. occupied by the Mokhcdsts nnd Szczvczyn shelled there will soon bo not n consonnut left In Polnud. The Molshevlsts nre snld to Inck nminunltion for their big guns; but their poison pens tire still doing effec tive work. The consumer Is now busy with thnt p!caMint little gnmc of What Ought to Me (Hid What Is or How Freight Mates Affect Fooil Prices. Colorado sheep shenrers. we nre i Inrorincd. malic .f,(0 n day. The rates are not quite so high ns in Wall street, but they are not half bad ut that. It mny be that by the time the middlemen have convinced themselves of the necessity for reform thev will be driven out of business altogether. Despite the lessons of the last few years there are those who persist iu thinking that T'ncle Sam's relation to Europe Is merely that of shopkeeper and plillnntliropist. Though nobodv hns et cnlled Ponzi a Xnpnleon of linnnce. newspaper men here and there are pnttmg them selves on the hnck because of their restraint. Cuba hns shown its gratitude to America by subscribing handsomely to the Itoosevelt Memorial Fund. It has not yet, however, done anything for Mr. Volstead. The house shortage in Pnrls is so acute that Marshal Foch cannot find a home. While saving tlie homes of his fellow countrymen he evidently over looked himself. Willy nilly. the Russian peasant may yet hne a strong voice in tle councils of the world, for expert opinion has it thnt he and he ulone knows the answer to bulshevism. With the notification of Franklin D. Itoosevelt esterdny there Is now no excuse for ignorance on the part of the candidates as to what happened in Chicago and San Francisco. Paris dispatches tell of fateful dif ferences of opinion between officers of the AiiTlo-Prench military mission nnd the Polish command concerning the con duct nf the war with the Molshevists This Is a little matter in which the Russians may eventually play the part of unwitting praccmnkers. That ever and unnn Individual overrides collective thought Is evidenced 111 France's Med Zone. France with dramatic instinct planned to keep cer tain wnr-torn districts as the Germans left them : but they reckoned without tile former inhabitants, who heie and there nre if turning and making green oases grow in the yellow desert. , Xew Lots Tlpiid. Mronk'vn. Is "id to be the sent of u Tenant Soviet. The tenants refuse fo pnv.more rent than thev ftilnk Is lust: they refuse to va cate: thev won't allow new tenants of whom thev don't npnrove to rent houses; thev have blacklisted tenants In possession who do pot subscribe to their views, and hnve driven out n nillcimin and n grocer who served hlqekllstecl persons. AH of which s nllccd bv n landlord who hns applied to the courts for iclief. Which seems to show Hint despite n house shortage and liluh rents It Isn't much fun being n landlord nowndas. iTW Do You Know? , QUIZ t. Wuit fmnnus coIIcko hns no reg ular stui'cnt bodv and gives no diplomas'' , 2. How did the Madeira Islands get heir neme" n. How miny enrs nfter Rngland's great s"ii victory In tlie Nnpolenn'i wars did ber ecpinlly conclusive land triumph occur? I Who was General Grant's Dem ocratic opponent during his first presidential campaign? 5. Who wrote the "Unelo Itemus' stories? . B. Nnm.e th" most fimniiB painting by Leonardo da Vine!? 7 Which Is th- highest of the palm trees? R. How nmny wars did Homo wage with Carthage? 0. What Is the normal value of u German mark? 10. Did ii Canadian vncht ever compete for the America's Cup? Answers to Yesterday's Quiz 1. A letter written bv the Frnselseiin missionary, Joseph do la Ilocne d'Alllop, about lG3fi refera to petroleum springs found In tho re gion of what Is now southwestern New York or northwestern I'enn syhnnla. 2 "Ten-Cent .Jimmy" wan a designa tion applied to I'resldcnt Janus Buchanan .1. Queenstown Is tho senport for Coil,-, Ireland 4 The plurals of tho word phalanx nre phalanxes and ulialnnges. C. The Itusslnn Solet Government de. clarcd war with Hie Central I'nw, i.i nt nn end on February 11, 1918. 0 Sun BebuhtlJii is on the cm reins western part of (ho north const or .Spain. v., ,, , 1 l.tulfil. rz TTnllnml In tlf 5stirnrrnAl., ,. uiniim ... ............ ....,..- ..,.. ...hiii-KI llcnuuiicnn is accrcciueu iis tnc llrst writer to express In print Hue ap preciation or iiincuin b wenysijurR speech. S. ICdgor Wilson Nyo was the rem name of Illll Nye, tho humorist 9. Tho taffrall In the rail around (ho stern of u vessel ; upper part of tlia stern. 10, Georgia wub the last onu of tno thirteen original colonies to be ecuicu, kWtfST 10," 'iDg WHAT ARE ALUMNI OF PENNSYLVANIA PLAN BIG ENDOWMENT FUND Need of Fixed Financial Policy for School Is Stressed New Provost to Play Important Part ALIIMXI of the University of Penn s.dvnnln nre engcr to start n cam paign to create an endowment fund to make the institution fre from nil fiunncinl embarrassments and obliga tions, according to Horace M. LIpplu cott, secictarv of the Alumni Society. "A great change is coining in the University," snld Mr. Lipplncott, "nud its future policy will be grentlv deter mined by the new provost the bomd of trustees selects. It is certnin thut n new policy Is in order. "There is no question that the only effective solution for the University's financial pioklems lies in an endowment fund. Yale and Princeton have them, and the time Infs come for Pennsylvania to he similarly situated. "While we want the new provost and board of trustees to take the lead, iilumni nf the country have announced their willingness to start a nntloual movement to endow the University fnr all time. They feel that the time-has come to put it on the basis of a nn lioual institution rather than n pro vincial one. I-nrgo Fund Is Needed "An endowment fund wo.ihl do away with the present hand-to-mouth exist ence and dependence upon either state aid or private donors with their at teudiint uncertainties. It would also put the univeislty on a basis where it could keep its couies up to top notch and I'lnplov the very best instructors obtainable." Other alumni nprcs-ied the opinion the time had come when the trustees must adopt n settled linanclal policy. "Up to the present." shid one, ''the haie not 'had any. There has been n hit oi miss attitude which no reputable iiiisiiicss liiaii won d to crate. N e have Itn.v ii.. i l.l 4..1 ... HV. I had to depend more or h ss precariously n priiafe dniicus or yn appropriations fiolil the state At any time these 'ces of revenue might fall down, or the state insist; on a certain control of the lol'cge, which would he a bad thing. "Ill fait one of the blc niobleins In the seh c tion of a new piovost is ic 'i'"s i oi whether we sluill continue to seek state support or if we shall 1 ",'""' oui money by more private means. When Mr. Harrison was 'provost he showed Kieat resource in getting private suppnit, while Doctor Smith got the state to aid a grent ileal. I suppose the hoiiid of trustees has been more or less spoiled and has proceeded along th noes oi icnst resistance. It was stilted thnt I'eovnst MmlH, had icsignecl nt an early date to give the new piovost ample time to prepare for any financial diflleultles which might arise within the coming venr. Indications point t,, ,i,,n,.tf f,,,. .i, fiscal miii' just passed that will exceed even the amount which has lately been allow i i the state Legislature Deficit Set High .Mark Officials of the University show that according to the Inst report the deficit for the fiscal year ending June :I0 P.'lll. was SMO.OOO. tho largest in the histoiv of the institution. This meant expenditures in excess of the revenues del hid from tultlcin fees and incomes fiom lieipiests and donations which may be spent. The great increase in the cost of maintenance of the University, due to EITH'S Hilly B.-Vnn & Corbctt-Jnmos J. "Tho Eighteenth Amendment" Gladys-Clark & Uor(jmnn-Heni-y In "Tunos of tho Hour" Eva Shirley & Her Band Dully Khv. Marshal Montcomeryj oti,cri(, WILLOW GROVE PARK-' I.IH'H AND 1IIH HVMl'IION'V OUC'HI'.htiia TODAY ' L' :in Mlnicla Hullo I :o -llllilu Hclter, Soprano 7 I r, -Vein Cumin. Honrnno (I in llnu DolnrcH, Hiiprnno I Wnl lc. Aug. 11. "HUUwt yinpr" hoIoM. f . 1.. ...... ,.t lil.lla.lul..l.l . ,1. . ..iuimh mm iitumi ... ........... .,..... v-nn-rttli SOlll'tV THIS JANU i: U. MILLER oANCIKg CONSEKVATORY 1028 CIIIISTNUT ST Wulnut 1H , PniVATB I,KHKONU DAILY DANdlNCl I'llVHICAl- CJUI.TIJIIE MODUItN KSTHUTls! and FANCY TROCADERO U'SA kuAAJSTSD THEY GOING TO DO ABOUT IT? present conditions, has increased tlie expenses considerably more than ."0 per cent fnr the last car over the year previous unci it was itated that the deficit must inevitably increase pro portionately. The state has in. the last fc w years allowed an appropriation up to $r0().flOO a year to cover these defi cits, but the increase for tlie last year will require cither u larger appropria tion from the state or heavy donations ffljini other sources. Members of the faculty say that un less this situation is met successfully the University will he in serious finan cial straits within the year and thut it will be necessary to pare down courses of instruction nnd professorships nnd even departments to stay within the income. ALTER CAMDEN CAR LINES Utilities Commission Authorizes De sired Change In Routes The Public Utilities Commission nt Trenton loda granted an application of the Fu'ilic Seivice Hallway Co. to change the routing of its SKtli and Eighth streets trolley line in Camden. The line will he changed from Ferry avenue, cast from Maple .avenue, to follow the Haddoii Heights line on Maple avenue and Wnodlyinie avenue to Itiehey iicnuc, where it is proposed to install a cioss-nver for turning the Sixth and Eighth stieets line cars hack. The coiiinti.ssion also granted per mission to remove an existing double track nn Ferry avenue about LI.'OO feet long from Maple avenue to (' press ave nue, the present tciiuiiiii of the Sixth and Eighth streets line. Municipal iiutlioiities of Camden and Woodl.Mine made application to change the line. Wills Probated Today Wills admitted to probate in the of fice of the icglstcr of wills tndav are those of Uranl; M. Douglass, of this citj, who died lu Cape Ma. $'.'0,0(10; Charlotte I', l'lnnum. 11." South I'lfty flrst street. $S7."ill. Inventories ,.f ,,',.. ".'i'i'i1 ,,sttcs filed; Joseph II. Itrittnn, !ST,"i(l.1 1 ',,,. '''"" ' uiim, ,i;;ii,i South Ktiudolph street, SSl'.'IO. Murk,. Hi 1,1, Kill,-II A M. in 11 p. m This Vec! Only Flint 1'rcsLiitalloii THOMAS MEIGHAN ULA l.i:i: and KAT1II.YN WILLIAMS !u "The Prince Chap" a I'AiuMoi'.vr I'lcrati: Directed by DeMille ADAI'TIU) I'HO.M Till: FAMOUS I'l w ivext Wts.K"Uo.N-r j:n"tMAlt'tY-A t ':. 7.45, ti.3u' l At William Faversham ''npvt'U1-- Yno ,'os'1' "IMSijm."' M.XI N l.llh - A COMMON I.I3VUI." ARCADIA ,?TT s.-. 1,.?l'.11,-h AI-I.-HTAltV0'1'"''''' "Silts of St. Anthony" A I'AKAMOUNT KIKST I'ltliaCNTATIOM VICTORIA a'T, TOAVtf D. W. GRIFFITH'S "The Idol Dancer" CAPITOl 7- mai(ki;t st. V-l 1 1 Wl, norcu.AH M.I.KAN " "KTMlliJbljll'iJvAW MAY REGENT MA"KKT M1 I'el UTH "Till: KAMI I, V JlONOIt" La J D II, AT JlJ.NII'i;ri CONTINUOUS VAliwjvn"; ,V ''' L Sack hook and ig i.'fejjj'jH,,,,,,., CROSS KEYS own i mahkkt hth BROADWAY "- n-l Snyder Aie, bwbbt HwisBTirs"!? n r- ' man-eating aavanea W New &"" -Peane, la the Newark Nw. DENY EXCESSIVE PROFITS Office Building Operators Answer,! Mayor's Tax Boost Suggestion Several shurp denials were entered bj real estate men to the recent ilcc-lara-tion of Mayor Moore that the on urn oi omce miiiuings should have tlieir taxes increased in accordance with the raising of ofliro rentals. There has never been an office build ing in this city that paid a fair return on me investment, declared one oper ator yestcrduv. "Xo buildini- In I'Ml.i. delpliiu paid more thnn ii per cent ami very few of them hnve ever shown tltat pront. iiie average is from .. t0 3JJ en "'mi miiivu, worn cunipnrrri in tne returns realized today from Ubtr Monds, mortgages and other forms ci( investment, gives the owner of the office building a very poor return en his money." Klsing exists in every department of, I "I'l-.dwuu uiiu irc(ucm vacancies ot nflicu suites is the leaon assigned for me small return. STEAM HEAT PRICES UP ? Germantown and Overbrook Com panies File New Rate Schedules The fierinaiitown Strum Co. ami tin Overbrook Steam Heat Co., hoth of tlih city, have filed new tariffs of rates uith the Public Service Commission at Hue risbiu-R. Hearings ou both applica tions will be held here September 2, The (icrmnntown firm proposes to in crease the condensation rme from S1.1S per 1000 pounds of condensation to !?1.-10. The Ovcrhrouk company w Islet' to increase its rate from flft -niiieirntl to eighty-five cents per 1000 pounds. METROPOLITAN OI'llRA HOl'SK 3 Shows Daily , ,,,,, FINK AIITH rilllHENTS Up in Mary's Attic THU COMIIDY 8i:nhatio.v ok the HUASO.V INCLUDING THE BATHING BEAUTIES IN PERSON Not ii .Slapstick Comedy, but a 1'icturc with An Idea Hundreds Turned' Away Desplts t the He.it Sailor Jim White Thrill AuilleiHM l) i:eo Perform"" Watch for tlw Aeroplane and (Jot a I'Tco r i iPCTKti tnc ST. OI'UIIA HOUSE VncoUNUI Last 5 Days MATlvion riAir.v .in. T'.VKNIMIS. 7 Till: I'lOTL'Itll MABTUIU'llX'll Thlj Picture In n noelutlen uf What Sl"t' , Artlni; Can He SMfMM CTmci caiaco'C7aM ecwi) syaacgcwL GARRICK CCSflt!(( St. Near Broad - Carl Laemmle oft" the Cinema SensaW of tho tseaav SHIPWRECKED AMONG CANNIBALS ncingthe amazing adventures of J iiiircjnu camera vta '"" u.itM tnnit.nnHrtn ntiiiMi Vif Neitl U'!'r wmm f3Sr- -WlX A P-- J uT-MPWlWjfJ SAAlHSfO Hitoii") "&-''